2. Koppel Enticed to Discovery by Clintonite Who Wrote for U.S. News
3. CBS's Smith Shares Risen's Distress at NSA Anti-Terrorism Efforts
4. Clooney: Must "Understand," Not "Label" Terrorists as "Evil"
Did the entire event really last just 40 minutes? The New York Times story posted Thursday afternoon simply referred to "an exceedingly upbeat 40-minute briefing to 13 living former Secretaries of State and Defense about how well things are going in Iraq." Presumably, since news accounts related the advice given to Bush by several attendees, that was preceded and/or followed by time for comments. The Times story even later noted that Bush heard from the group for another ten minutes, followed by time with his advisers. I reviewed stories aired on all three cable news networks, as well as the AP and Washington Post postings, but none included any information about the length of the consultation. In the story in the hard copy edition of Friday's Washington Post, however, Jim VandeHei reported that "Bush spent an hour" with the "prominent foreign policy voices." See: www.washingtonpost.com [This item was posted Thursday night on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To share your comments, go to: newsbusters.org ] Neither the CBS Evening News or NBC Nightly News uttered a word about the session/photo-op.
From Israel, after a story on violence in Iraq, Bob Woodruff read this item on the January 6 World News Tonight. As he spoke, viewers saw video of the former officials around the table in the Roosevelt Room with Bush followed by a picture of them all with Bush, VP Cheney, Defense Secretary Rumsfeld and Secretary of State Rice in the Oval Office: Sanger led his New York Times posting: Colin Powell said nothing -- a silence that spoke volumes to many in the White House today. His predecessor, Madeleine Albright, was a bit riled after hearing an exceedingly upbeat 40-minute briefing to 13 living former secretaries of state and defense about how well things are going in Iraq. Saying the war in Iraq was "taking up all the energy" of President Bush's foreign policy team, she asked Mr. Bush whether he had let nuclear programs in Iran and North Korea spin out of control, and Latin America and China policy suffer by benign neglect. "I can't let this comment stand," Mr. Bush shot back, telling Ms. Albright and the rare assembly of her colleagues, who reached back to the Kennedy White House, that his administration "can do more than one thing at a time." The Bush administration, the president insisted, had "the best relations of any country with Japan, China and Korea," and active programs to win alliances around the world. That was, according to some of the participants, one of the few moments of heat during an unusual White House effort to bring some of its critics into the fold and give a patina of bipartisan common ground to the strategy that Mr. Bush has laid out in recent weeks for Iraq. But if it was a bipartisan consultation, as advertised by the White House, it was a brief one. Mr. Bush allowed 5 to 10 minutes this morning for interchange with the group -- which included three veterans of another difficult war, the one in Vietnam: Robert S. McNamara, Melvin R. Laird and James R. Schlesinger. Then the entire group was herded the Oval Office for what he called a "family picture." Those who wanted to impart more wisdom to the current occupants of the White House were sent back across the hall to meet again with Stephen J. Hadley, the national security adviser, and Gen. Peter Pace, the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff. But, as several of the participants noted, by that time Mr. Bush, Vice President Dick Cheney, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld had gone on to other meetings.... END of Excerpt from NYTimes.com For the Sanger piece in full: www.nytimes.com By comparison, reporter William Branigin began his 2:30pm EST Washington Post Web site posting, with a lot less attitude: President Bush reached out for suggestions about his Iraq policy today, inviting a bipartisan group of 13 former secretaries of state and defense to the White House for talks with him and top aides. Bush told reporters after the meeting that the former secretaries from Republican and Democratic administrations had received a briefing "on our strategy for victory in Iraq" from Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Defense Secretary Donald H. Rumsfeld and the U.S. ambassador and top military commander in Iraq. "I've also had a chance to listen to their concerns, their suggestions about the way forward," Bush said. "Not everybody around this table agreed with my decision to go into Iraq, and I fully understand that. But these are good, solid Americans who understand that we've got to succeed now that we're there." Bush said he was "most grateful for the suggestions that have been given," adding, "We take to heart the advice." The meeting marked the first time that Bush has convened such a gathering of former Cabinet secretaries to talk about Iraq, an outreach effort recommended to him by senior Republican members of Congress, among others. The meeting coincided with another deadly day in Iraq, where insurgent violence claimed the lives of at least 130 Iraqis and five more American soldiers.... Bush, seated at a long table between Rice and Vice President Cheney, took no questions from reporters. But a few of the former secretaries answered queries about the meeting outside the White House, saying the group emphasized a need for the president to clearly explain his policies to the public. "It was a unique meeting," said Frank C. Carlucci, 75, who served as defense secretary under President Ronald Reagan in the late 1980s. "It was all very respectful, but I think people didn't hesitate to express candid views." Among those who made "very strong points," he said, were former defense secretary Melvin R. Laird, 83, who served under President Richard M. Nixon, and former secretaries of state George P. Shultz, 85, a Reagan appointee, and Madeleine K. Albright, 68, who served under President Bill Clinton.... END Excerpt from WashingtonPost.com
For Sanger's posting in full: www.washingtonpost.com President Bush brought foreign policy heavyweights from yesteryear to the White House on Thursday, including Democrats who have opposed his Iraq strategy. He got support for the mission -- along with a few concerns -- and a right to claim he was reaching out. Waging an unpopular war that has dragged down his approval ratings, Bush has been campaigning to win the public over to his argument that he has a successful strategy for stabilizing Iraq and bringing American troops home. As part of that effort, Bush brought to the White House more than a dozen former secretaries of state and defense, split almost evenly between Republican and Democratic administrations, for a detailed briefing and give-and-take. He gambled that one-time high-level public officials, when personally summoned by the president, would resist temptation to be too critical. He was right.... END of Excerpt from the AP The AP dispatch in its entirety: news.yahoo.com
Howard Kurtz, in his Thursday Washington Post story on Ted Koppel's decision to join the Discovery Channel, revealed a tantalizing tidbit in his tenth paragraph about who first reached out to Tom Bettag, the Executive Producer of Nightline until Koppel's departure from ABC in November: "The first contact came on Dec. 1, the week after Koppel's last Nightline broadcast, when Don Baer, a Discovery executive vice president who previously worked in the Clinton White House, e-mailed and then called Bettag." Bettag and several others from Koppel's ABC crew will follow Koppel to Discovery.
For Kurtz's January 5 story: www.washingtonpost.com [This item was posted Thursday afternoon on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To share your views, go to: newsbusters.org ] When Baer joined CBS News in 1998 to provide analysis, a stint which ended within a year, the February 20, 1998 MRC CyberAlert provided a brief rundown of his career: CBS News has brought aboard a Clinton insider. In the February 19 Washington Post John Carmody reported: "Don Baer, who left the White House in August after 3½ years, most recently serving as Director of Communications, has signed on as a consultant for CBS News. He'll give his perspective on several regular CBS News programs about the '€˜behind-the-scenes' activity in the administration as his old boss continues to fend off crises. But network sources say '€˜he won't be shilling.'" Carmody noted Baer's earlier career in journalism with U.S. News where he held the title of Assistant Managing Editor when he jumped to the White House. But Carmody missed another interesting resume item: As detailed in MediaWatch at the time, the April 9, 1994 National Journal divulged that when North Carolina Governor James Hunt, a Democrat, opposed Senator Jesse Helms in 1984, Baer, then a lawyer in New York City, "organized a $75,000 Manhattan fundraiser for Hunt." Three years later, he joined U.S. News. So can Baer keep his personal feelings out of his journalism and just how much does he adore Bill Clinton? Check out this excerpt from a September 23, 1996 Weekly Standard profile by Christopher Caldwell: "Clinton liked the articles Baer contributed to U.S. News during the 1992 campaign. While other journalists -- David Shribman of The Wall Street Journal, Joe Klein of New York, Ron Brownstein of the Los Angeles Times -- ignored the more sensational aspects of the campaign for enthusiastic grapplings with 'Clintonism,' Baer wrote with extreme empathy about Clinton's background. "'I think it's a southern thing' says one of Baer's journalistic colleagues, who also knows Clinton. 'Being of the South and still being rooted there, yet being driven and ambitious enough to prove oneself in the larger world -- the two of them have a lot in common.' While Baer has always been a loyal Democrat, he's not necessarily a liberal. Like Clinton, he has an idiosyncratic, instinctive, generally progressive politics that winds up at beyond-left-and-rightism. This enthusiasm can appear like ideological non-commitment or caginess. One New Democrat who met Baer at a dinner last year described him as 'bland beyond description, a fount of cliches. 'Clinton was the moral leader of the Universe,' and all that.'" END of Excerpt from previous CyberAlert
[The CBS portion of this item was first posted Wednesday, by the MRC's Rich Noyes, on the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org. To add your comments, go to: newsbusters.org ] Shortly after 7:30am, Smith touted his upcoming interview with Risen, advertising him as "the author of a new book the Bush administration does not want you to read." A few minutes later, he introduced Risen by asserting that the NSA's surveillance program "has shocked many Americans." Smith used sinister language to describe the NSA program: "There's an organization called the National Security Agency which is a huge, basically, spy organization that's been authorized by the government to -- really has carte blanche -- to listen in on phone conversations, to tap into e-mail information on any American citizen without having to go to a court to get a warrant, to check this out." Unlike NBC's Katie Couric, who interviewed Risen for Tuesday's Today, Smith did not ask Risen about the New York Times' questionable holding of the story for a year before finally publishing it just as the Senate was considering the renewal of the Patriot Act, nor did he ask Risen about the possible axe-grinding motives of his sources.
Though Tuesday's Today displayed on screen "Domestic Spying Debate, Did Bush Break The Law?", Couric, the MRC's Geoff Dickens noted, challenged Risen a bit: Back to Wednesday's Early Show, Smith did at one point play Devil's advocate, asking Risen about the idea that the President had all of the authority he needed: "Well the President says listen, our job, my job is to protect American citizens, and at all costs I need to make sure another 9/11 doesn't happen, don't I have the authority, what's the principle involved here the explain, the doctrine of self defense, can't I use that, don't I have the authority to do this on my own?" Risen's answer was a textbook example of the liberal media's elitism: "Well I think that's the debate that we can now have because this is public. What the President was doing was secretly doing this without having any ability for Americans to know about it and to discuss whether or not this is legal. In the end, we may as a country decide this is proper, but there was no debate about this prior to this." In other words, Risen is arguing that no matter what the harm or potential harm to national security, the New York Times is to be thanked for exposing the operation so that a "public debate" can begin. By that logic, a malcontent colonel who thought Eisenhower's plans for D-Day were a mess would have been justified in going public. Or, if a Manhattan Project scientist was upset at the idea of dropping the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima, he should have found a willing newspaper to help him blow the whistle. At the end of the interview, Smith was effusive, calling Risen's the "most disturbing book I've read in a long time." Here's the full transcript of the January 4 exchange, as taken down by the MRC's Michael Rule:
Harry Smith: "The startling revelation that the National Security Agency has been responsible for a wide-ranging domestic spying operation has shocked many Americans. Now the New York Times reporter who broke the story, James Risen, has a new book detailing how and why our government started eavesdropping on its own citizens without warrants. It's called "State of War: The Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration." Jim Risen is with us this morning, good morning."
The MRC's Scott Whitlock caught the clip aired in a Wednesday story by William La Jeunesse on Special Report with Brit Hume. Thanks to the MRC's Michelle Humphrey, his NewsBusters blog posting features a video clip of Clooney, in both RealPlayer and Windows Media formats. Go to: newsbusters.org The Internet Movie Database's plot outline for the movie: "A politically-charged epic about the state of the oil industry in the hands of those personally involved and affected by it." For IMDb's page on Clooney's screed: www.imdb.com From the top of the January 4 story:
Brit Hume: "With terrorism in the headlines nearly every day since 9/11, movie makers have tried to capitalize on the interest of Americans by producing fictional films on the issue. But their portrayals of individual terrorists appear, to at least some critics, to be fictitious in more then one sense." -- Brent Baker
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